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Community action and tiger conservation: Assessing the role of social capital 1. Archi Rastogi* ± # 2. Sneha Thapiyal + 3. Gordon M Hickey* *Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Canada + ± Wildlife Institute of India, India # Department of Environment and Resource Studies, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada ^Centre for Public Policy, Indian Institute of Management Banglore, Banglore, India
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Contents Introduction Social capital Study area Methods Results Discussion
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Introduction
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Biodiversity Conservation (Tigers) Large Protected Areas, Exclusively Managed Introduction Conflict, Management Issues, Political Issue Negative Feedback, Extinction of Tigers
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Social capital “Networks, norms, and trust, that facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit” (Putnam 1993) Networks, flow of information, trust, reciprocity and shared norms
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Social capital and tiger conservation? Effective partnerships (Kawanishi and Seidensticker 2010) Support for management (Rastogi et al. 2012) Control poaching (Project Tiger 2005) Reduction in ‘revenge killing’(Damania et al. 2003) Political support (Chhatre and Saberwal 2005) Political challenges (Chhatre and Saberwal 2005; Saberwal 1996) Collective non-cooperation or retaliation (Mukherjee 2009) Incendiary action (Damania et al. 2003) Cooperation in poaching?
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Social capital is key!
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Study Area: Corbett Tiger Reserve, India Globally important tiger population
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Corbett Tiger Reserve
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Source: Rastogi et al. (2010)
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Methods: social capital Village level data: interviews Household level: questionnaires Social Capital Assement Tool (SCAT) Integrated Questionnaire for the Measurement of Social Capital (SC-IQ) Qualitative component: interviews
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Methods: Questionnaire 1.Demographic Profile 2.Structural Social Capital Exclusions Collective action Organizational density Networks and mutual support Conflict resolution 3.Cognitive Social Capital Solidarity Reciprocity and cooperation Trust
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Methods Locally adapted Control for respondent’s and household charachtersistics Analysis: ordered logit regression; likelihood of going from ‘low’ collective action to ‘high’ collective action
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Results Model 1Model 2 Coefficient Standard error Odds ratioCoefficient Standard error Odds ratio Structural social capital 0.186*** a 0.061.204 0.007 b 0.0621.007 Components of structural social capital: (i)Exclusions 0.6330.4671.883 (i)Collective action 0.1210.1531.129 (i)Organizational density and characteristics -0.0440.1590.957 (i)Networks and mutual support 0.394* a 0.2351.483 -0.225 b 0.2400.799 (i)Conflict resolution 0.1570.1731.17 Cognitive social capital 0.013 a 0.0551.013 0.233*** b 0.0691.262 Components of cognitive social capital: (i)Solidarity -0.073 a 0.1590.929 0.4** b 0.1961.492 (i)Reciprocity and cooperation 0.505**0.2021.657 (i)Trust -0.073 a 0.1590.929 Controls for respondent and household characteristics Yes Observations120 LR chi 2 37.65 41.71 Prob > chi 2 0.0002 0.0012 Pseudo R 2 0.167 0.185 Log likelihood-93.95 -91.97 *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1 Coding for components of social capital: 1- no one or affected parties; 2 – village leaders; 3 – the whole village. For variables that violate the proportional odds assumption: a – coefficient for expecting village leaders of the whole village to respond compared to no one or affected parties responding; b - coefficient for expecting someone to respond versus the whole village to respond. Partial Proportional Odds Ordered Logit Models for components of social capital in the villages
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Results: qualitative Intense tourism Rise in price of land financial disparity Loss of solidarity and trust (forthcoming)
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Discussion: Implications for tiger conservation Social capital facilitates collective action Direction of action may vary Community action is key
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Discussion: components of social capital Both structural and cognitive Possible to engineer: networks and leadership Inherent: solidarity
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Discussion: social capital undermined? Tourism as a resource? Transforms village, reduces social capital Inequity in distributing benefits
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Conclusion Complex, multilayered institutions needed Social capital is a resource, not a challenge!
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Conclusion Complex challenges Pragmatic solutions Who Killed the Tiger? Tuesday, Assembly Hall A, 15:30
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Acknowledgements Sustainable Futures Research Laboratory Wildlife Institute of India Department of Environment and Resource Studies, University of Waterloo Fonds de recherche sur la société et la culture (FQRSC), Quebec Tomlinson Centennial Fellowship in Forest Ecology Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University The Corbett Foundation Viraat Welfare Society
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Thank you
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